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30
Three Score and Ten in Retrospect
stated, "because we wanted to feel really good about it when we did." Both of them had been on the move. Orpha had not become attached to a particular ward in Salt Lake, and John had been spending his time between Salt Lake and Coalville. The young couple started their marriage having many experiences in common. Both had grown up as members of Mormon families in small towns where their parents were recognized and respected members of their communities. Both had the experience of attending Utah colleges, with a year as fellow students at the University of Utah before they knew each other. Both came from families that were particularly active in and had long been identified with the Democratic Party and both had the opportunity to meet and thus become personally identified with Franklin D. Roosevelt and other members of his family. In those days the FBI agents were called " G men (government men). When John and Orpha were married, they were both working for the Department of Justice, the FBI being part of it. A news item in the local paper announcing their forthcoming marriage was entitled, "G-Woman Gets Her Man." During the years while John was Assistant U S . Attorney it was permissible to maintain a private practice in association with a law firm. In 1934, John was associated with Delbert M. Draper, Marion G. Romney, and J. Stuart McMaster; in 1938, Mr. Draper's son Courtney joined the firm. A few years later John officed with a firm in the Boston Building; these men included Ben Rich, Gordon Strong, Shirley Jones and Allen H. Tibbals. The cases John handled involved Navajo as well as Ute Indians, and in the summer of 1938, Orpha and John with John Jr. (born December, 1937 and then six months old) took their first trip to Navajo and Hopi country as a family vacation. As Orpha described the trip: We drove to Shiprock, New Mexico, and Window Rock, Arizona, then across the Navajo Reservation into Hopi country, coming out at Tuba City on the west, then north to Marble Canyon Bridge on our way home, and into Kanab. This was strictly a vacation. We did all the tourist things, bought many

30
Three Score and Ten in Retrospect
stated, "because we wanted to feel really good about it when we did." Both of them had been on the move. Orpha had not become attached to a particular ward in Salt Lake, and John had been spending his time between Salt Lake and Coalville. The young couple started their marriage having many experiences in common. Both had grown up as members of Mormon families in small towns where their parents were recognized and respected members of their communities. Both had the experience of attending Utah colleges, with a year as fellow students at the University of Utah before they knew each other. Both came from families that were particularly active in and had long been identified with the Democratic Party and both had the opportunity to meet and thus become personally identified with Franklin D. Roosevelt and other members of his family. In those days the FBI agents were called " G men (government men). When John and Orpha were married, they were both working for the Department of Justice, the FBI being part of it. A news item in the local paper announcing their forthcoming marriage was entitled, "G-Woman Gets Her Man." During the years while John was Assistant U S . Attorney it was permissible to maintain a private practice in association with a law firm. In 1934, John was associated with Delbert M. Draper, Marion G. Romney, and J. Stuart McMaster; in 1938, Mr. Draper's son Courtney joined the firm. A few years later John officed with a firm in the Boston Building; these men included Ben Rich, Gordon Strong, Shirley Jones and Allen H. Tibbals. The cases John handled involved Navajo as well as Ute Indians, and in the summer of 1938, Orpha and John with John Jr. (born December, 1937 and then six months old) took their first trip to Navajo and Hopi country as a family vacation. As Orpha described the trip: We drove to Shiprock, New Mexico, and Window Rock, Arizona, then across the Navajo Reservation into Hopi country, coming out at Tuba City on the west, then north to Marble Canyon Bridge on our way home, and into Kanab. This was strictly a vacation. We did all the tourist things, bought many